Quoting Bryan Derksen bryan.derksen@shaw.ca:
Steve Bennett wrote:
On 12/17/07, Bryan Derksen bryan.derksen@shaw.ca wrote:
My hope from all this is that it will renew our appreciation for some of the coverage Wikipedia gives to pop cultural and "low-notability" topics that have been under steady pressure from merging and deleting for a long time now. It's true that our quality is sometimes lacking on these areas, but they're topics that people actually want to read and come to Wikipedia looking for information on. It's silly to shoot ourselves in the foot by turning them away.
We don't turn them away. Pop culture is a huge part of Wikipedia. Of course, the absolute most revoltingly bad parts of it we kill off. But your implication that we're slowly moving towards some state where there will be very little or no pop culture on Wikipedia is off the mark.
A long while ago I noticed that there were articles for most episodes from the "Scrubs" TV show, a very popular comedy series. They were mostly quite detailed, with comprehensive infoboxes and standardized sections, very far from "revoltingly bad". They were poorly categorized so I created [[category:Scrubs episodes]] and spent an hour or so tidying everything up, then moved on with other things since I don't watch the series myself.
A few days back I got an automated notice that category:Scrubs episodes was up for speedy deletion because it was empty. I see now that pretty much every episode article has been wiped out and redirected to the "list of Scrubs articles", which has only the barest minimum of information about each episode in it. Wikipedia has drastically reduced the amount of information it carries about this series. This has been happening a lot, check the history of pretty much any "list of <foo> episodes" article and you'll see a massive surge of redirects and link removals in recent months. I imagine some group of editors must have managed to make some change to a notability guideline somewhere and are now using it to cut a swath of destruction through such articles.
In one case I came across an article for an episode of a TV series that had been based on a much more obscure play of the same name. The article on the TV episode had been wiped and redirected. So I salvaged some material from the article's history to create an article about the _play_, and that article appears to be perfectly acceptable. I guess plays are "literary", and therefore not as easily tarred with the fancruft brush even though this one's not nearly as widely known as the "non-notable" episode that was based on it.
It's not just for articles about individual episodes. Recently the article about the main antagonist organization in the science fiction TV series Farscape, the "Peacekeepers," got deleted after a weak AfD with three keep votes and four delete votes. The rest of the articles about various details of the Farscape series started collapsing like a house of cards after that. I notice that one of the few survivors that's still up for AfD, [[Command_Carrier]], has as part of its nomination the comment "Many other Farscape articles have been AfD'ed since, and all that's clear is that they have been abandoned by fandom". Well, duh. Why should fans of Farscape bother spending any further effort on improving Wikipedia articles when so much of their work is just being arbitrarily swept away?
I also notice a number of "merge and delete" votes in that AfD. In fact, it looks like the deletion that started this all was a merge-and-delete case as well; material from [[Peacekeeper (Farscape)]] got put into [[Races in Farscape]]. I'm restoring the history. I don't delve into AfD often, are "merge and delete" votes really this common in general over there? If so that's a serious problem, it's riddling Wikipedia with copyvios.
A good idea for Google would be to have some mechanism to make it easy to import a Wikipedia article into a Knol complete with edit history. That'd allow this work to be transwikied over there and saved, and Google would get the content and the eyeballs that Wikipedia's throwing away. Win for our contributors, win for Google.
The relevant guidelines are WP:FICT and WP:EPISODE which are frankly being used to remove a tremendous amount of content. The sensible thing to do for all of this is to allow some minimum of inherited notability. But I doubt anyone is going to go for that. Almost every tv show on my watchlist is being wiped out. This isn't creating as much drama as the webcomics but it is far more pervasive. Many of the Stargate editors have left simply in disgust and I suspect this is true for other series as well.